Media Futures recently interviewed Liesl Yearsley Chief Executive Officer of Akin.com( USA)
Cebit Australia Held Tuesday 15th May 2018
Liesl’s comments are very relevant to the media industry given the rise of predictive marketing and the need to stay ahead of the future needs of customers
Topic - The power of Artificial Intelligence to shape the future
Three key questions to Liesl
Q 1. Why will AI solve more issues?
Liesl Yearsley –
AI is growing every single minute of every single day and the reason is multi fold . AI can process huge amounts of data whereas humans are limited by our biology. AI however is evolving exponentially. AI can classify things with absolute ease that used to be hard so AI can help make decisions and solve more problems. There is a lot of work going on in research labs and every single technology company is declaring itself as an AI company.
AI is their future and they are backing it with millions of dollars so AI is inevitable.
Q 2. Where does the AI Fantasy stop and AI reality become mainstream
Liesel Yearsley –
I can see where you are coming from in that AI is very overhyped at the moment. The AI fantasy has been with us for a long time. It has already become reality and we just forget that its AI. The air conditioner came out of AI research in the eighties …remember fuzzy logic? AI algorithms are going on in most big companies and we see more funding for AI. In the US 64% of households have Amazon Prime according to some studies and more than 80% of affluent households. More and more we have AI talking to us and anticipating decisions before we think we have made them. An example is musical streaming that picks our music before we do.
The question when does it become more than half of our decision making and social interaction? We will probably say, oh how did I manage to do this before AI?
I don’t think we will even notice.
Q 3. When does AI start controlling human common sense and the limits of human logic
Liesel Yearsley –
Logic is doable for AI, common sense is harder. Abstract reasoning is even harder again. Every kind of generation venture funding is into common sense solving but that is something we have not quite cracked yet. At my company Akin we are working on problems around common sense and abstract reasoning. We are delving into neuro sciences to find out how do humans do common sense.
We are using a lot of work out of modern neuro sciences and decision theory. Most of the waves of AI have been inspired by non computational science fields. Our early AI systems in the fifties came out of working with human beings and how to model experts so we had our expert systems. Deep learning and current machine learning started in the ninties came from neuro sciences and biology. In the past decade we have seen learning from non traditional computer fields about human decision making. Whether or not we will get it right anytime soon is another question. We are experimenting hard and we expect to see results in the next 6 to 12 months horizon. We still need humans to make common sense decisions. When are going to start handing over our decisions to AI , I believe that is already happening.
Can you imagine driving around with a paper map? In the next five years we will be using AI about what products we buy. We already use AI on whom we should be dating. What news do you want ? We are at about the 5% to 10% mark now and in 5 to 10 years it will be at the 30 to 50% mark.
Media Futures publishes articles of interest in the media sector. If your media policy, media strategy, media planning and media buying have not yet addressed AI it's time to step back and engage with an independent media professional.
Website mediafutures.com.au




Wednesday 30 October 2019
Credit to CEBIT 2019 for arranging this interview
Here's what Stephen had to say.
Q 1. Has social media peaked? Is there too much of it?
I don’t think social media has peaked.There are still a lot of people in the world who don’t have the internet. In many ways social media is useful like electricity and water. Facebook has 2 .6 billion users and there are 7 billion people on the earth so in that sense there is a long way to go. Social media absorbs our attention and has AI to support it.
Anything of too much can be bad and there are limits and there are limits and how it interfaces with your psychology and emotions.Some of that is not understood and we are starting to understand it.
It can be disconnecting and alarming, like the telephone, how can you talk on that contraption for so long and you cant see them. Humans are adaptable.
Is there too much social media..... I don’t think so, but we need the right kind and right quality of social media.
Q 2. With the recent investigations into social companies, has the integrity of the social sector been damaged?
It depends on your perspective as a user, as a social scientist or an advertiser or government.
They all have slightly different perceptions. We have left the age when social media was universally good.
Thats behind us. There is good and bad in the internet and social media.We tend not to understand the bad things and if we do not understand them then we don’t know how to put in mitigations.
I urge companies like Google and Facebook to open up their platforms and ask the experts to come in and ask what good and bad effect is this having on individuals, societies, politics, how opinions get formed. Some are easy to identify and can be removed but it’s the subtle effects those are the ones we need to understand more deeply.
Q 3. How can SME make money from social media if a bidding system exists?
Facebook is pretty good as a platform and they and others have built tools to reach audiences. Before the internet if you were a coffee shop as an example you could not afford to run TV advts or radio advts or place newspaper advts, the audiences were too big and the advts too expensive.
Social media is built for the long tail of small business that traditional media could not build for.
The fact it is a bidding system should not make any difference as its a sustainable business and if a level is not found then prices come down. There is tension in an auction and small business should not be at a disadvantage to big business.
Q 4. How far can social media go? What are its limits?
The key insight from social media is that it taps into a human desire, to be connected to other people and it uses technology to do that.
There is a lot more energy left in social, we have not seen the end of it.
There are 2.5 billion smart phones now,10 years ago there were none. Theres a long way to go.
Its based on what people want to know. Whats going on in my world.The things that are disruptive and exciting are the advancement of data privacy and and consumers will have more control. The things to watch for the future is virtual technology like VR I phones. As an example if my friend is in Bali I can go surfing on VR with that friend.
Copyright Media Futures
Media Futures interviewed Stephen Sheeler at Cebit 2019
Darling Harbour Sydney October 2019
Website mediafutures.com.au




